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Dracula's donation
SC HOSTS WAR CONFERENCE
.CULA'S BLOOD will someday save a life. Here hor-actor Bela Lugosi makes his donation to the Red Cross odbank, which will visit SC Sept. 30.
roy sponsors lasma drive
he 15 minutes Trojan trainees and civilians are being d to give September 30 may save the life of an American ceman at war, as on that day a Red Cross mobile plasma-unit will visit SC. *
his plasma-obtaining caravan is scheduled to accomodate
volunteer trainees and civilians from I 12 to 4 p.m. at Elisabeth von Klein-
_ - _ m a rtlllr A Smid hall. Registration for the drive |i|5 I V DU 156 begins Monday, September 20, and
will continue until the donation
lerno stab
IED HEADQUARTERS, North a, Sept. 14—(U.P)—Battered but c Allied troops fought a bat-
o the death with three Nazi red divisions around Salerno and at some points fell back the British raced to their aid th coasts of southern Italy, ing Cosenza and Bari, e Berlin radio, after asserting American troops in panic were g to evacuate _ the Salerno ehead, said in a subsequent cast that it “remains to be whether an evacuation would tempted. Earlier Berlin claim-at 8000 to 10,000 American had been killed, leaving the h in a position comparable to erque.
ran British officers compared ilar effort to storm hill posi-close to shore to British troops fi$$t world war when they to force the Turkish Dardan-and were hurled back disas-ly into the sea.
nt dispatches told of a bloody, aw struggle surging across the es southeast of Salerno, up slopes to the east and on the es road north of the port, e was doubt which side held no itself after it had changed 'g several times, st official reports said that re-rcements and supplies were still aming into the Salerno bridge-d and a front dispatch said that stantial help had arrived to tly bolster Allied infantry and illery strength. It was not clear, ever, when this dispatch was It is said the Allies had dged a gap separating two land-units since the day of the inion, greatly relieving the supply in.
ctivity book ale to close
The njimber of Trojans who
11 occupy the 50-yard line root-section at the UCLA game in the coliseum Sept. 25 is to date a mystery.
Yesterday no one connected with the selling of ASSC activity books was able to give the Trojan the number of books sold.
Sales, however, will not close antil this Friday, and the price for the book, which will admit SC students to six home football fames, dances, drama productions, and other athletic events, is $5.50.
Trainee anti civilian students, who hold activity books, will join form the student rooting section. Trainees who do not own
* student body book will be admitted to a section near the goal line.
quota is reached.
“Trainees are being given preference as to appointment hours,” said Betty May Rinehart, chairman of the SC blood bank committee, “but civilians on campus are welcome to sign up.”
Servicemen are to register in their respective halls. Civilians will make appointments at the Victory hut.
“The Red Cross can handle 85 donors an hour,” stated Jerry Fox, location chairman, “and the 15 minutes it will take the trainee repays itself many times in the lives saved in actual combat.”
Trainees offering plasma require no parental consent, regardless of age. Civilians under 21 must present written consent of at least one parent or guardian.
Sub-chairmen under Miss Rinehart are Bill Ryan, servicemen; Tyler MacDonald, publicity; Don-yell McEathron, posters; Sally Unmack, registration; Jerry Fox, plasma bank location.
Hall representatives include Mickey Heeger, Ned Riley, Calvin Straub,- Bob Mueller, Johnny Kimball, Howard Callanan, Ed Diener, Fred Benson, and Harry Schmidt.
- 15 minutes may save a life -
Panhel tea shows style
Clothes suitable for the well dressed rushee during rush month and rush week will be modeled by 17 sorority members at a fashion show sponsored by the Panhellenic council under the direction of Jean Working, president, from 2 to
4 p.m. tomorrow in the Student Union lounge.
A second presentation of the show will be given at 4:30 p.m. for women in the university dormitories on the lawn in front of the SAE house.
Clothes chosen by Virginia Bates, women’s advertising manager of Desmonds, to > be modeled include date dresses for teas and desserts, suits and wool dresses for brunch and informal teas, black dresses for mother-daughter teas and pledging, skirts and sweaters for campus wear, and slack suits for informal rush parties.
Women who will mod£l are Dorothy Smith, Pat Annabil, Rosemary Trucano, Priscilla Brooks, Marilyn Quaintance, Leah Tiegs, Jerry Rus-cano, Mary Lou Lacey, Helen Be-ronio, Corinne O’Brien, Virginia Miller, Marilou Horn, Peggy Levesque, Nancy Frye, Betty Lou Granger,. Jean Working, and Joy Miller.
- 15 minutes may save a life -
Representatives of nine California universities and colleges will assemble at SC Saturday morning for the first combined War Board conference. Gathering to discuss plans for campus war activities, student body presidents, War Board chairmen, and members will meet in 350 Administration at 9 a.m. to be welcomed by President Rufus B. Von KleinSmid and ASSC President Bill Caldwell.
Following plans for coordinating war activities with college affairs, Patty Wiese, SC War Board chairman, called the
War Board members will meet in the War Board office, 230 Student Union, today at 12:30 p.m. The following are asked to be present: Eleanor Rankin, Carroll Brinkerhoff, Helen Taylor, Charles Aylesbury, Bob Meyer, and Mickey Heeger.
i meeting to allow joint discussion of campus promotions.
Present for the conference will be representatives from SC, Stanford, UCLA, Occidental, Redlands, Pomona, Whittier, Santa Barbara state, and San Diego state colleges.
Knights
Miss Wiese announced that the conference will give War Boards an opportunity to mull over individual ideas which may be adapted to each school. The conference will discuss war stamp and bond promotion, Red Cross programs, postwar planning, home defense, and miscellaneous topics pertaining to servicemen’s programs, salvage, and morale.
“Since SC is one of the leading schools of California with many varied war activities, we are taking the lead in planning coopeiation among the various War Boards, Miss Wiese stated
The SC War Board was first organized in October 1942 and was directed by Jack Williams. With the advent of the college training program, the scope of the War Board was widened and it became a central committee for unification of all student war activities.
Members of the board at present are Patty Wiese, chairman; Helen Taylor, Red Cross activities; Charles Aylesbury, home defense; Carroll Brinkerhoff, stamps and bonds; Mickey Heeger, servicemen’s committee, and Bob Meyer, postwar planning. A representative for the War chest campaign haa yet to be chosen.
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
TROJAN
Vol. XXXV
Night phone: RI. 5472
Los Angeles, Wednesday, Sept. 15, 1943
No. 32
Lecture warns against evil living pattern
Christian methods of dealing with the problems and dilemmas of modern society were analyzed by Dr. George B. Mangold, professor of sociology, yesterday in his discussion of “The Hope of a New World,” by Temple, and “Religion and the Present Crisis,” by Knox.
William Temple, Archbishop of Canterbury, sees two main-faults in English patterns of living that must be eliminated for society’s good. The first is the idea that faith in God is a dispensable indulgence, that religion is not a full-time need. The second flaw is found in the English educational system,' which is neither sectarian nor atheistic, thus fostering the idea that God is a useless ornament, an experience that can be dispensed with.
Temple advocated a six-point program to establish Christian social justice.
1. There must be a limited state ownership, especially o*f public utilities.
2. Labor must have a share in management of industry.
3. Profits must be limited.
4. Government must give a family allowance for the third child and thereafter, to offset the declining British birth rate.
The second book discussed by Dr. Mangold, “Religion and the Present Crisis,” is a compilation of nine lectures by professors at the University of Chicago and edited by John Knox.
“As the book is a compilation of various individual lectures, it lacks the continuity that a work by one author might have,” Dr. Mangold commented.
He added that the authors were experts in their fields, compensating for this fault.
The book emphasizes the fact that democracy is a collective way of life, with emphasis on the community, not the individual. The authors add that Americans expect democracy without the self-sacrifice necessary for a realistic approach to our problem.
- 15 minutes may save a life -
. . . will meet at 12:45 p.m. today at the Kappa Alpha house for a group picture.
Coed aid asked to mail seals
A call has been issued from the SC employment bureau for girls to work in the Los Angeles Tuberculosis seal sale office during the annual fund-raising drive.
According to Mrs. Iva Custer, director of the bureau, girls will be paid 62 cents an hour for typing and office work. They may choose their own hours and may work full days or part-time.
Mrs. Custer asks girls interested in working to report to the employment bureau, Student Union.
Street dance tops All-U party Friday
A combination street dance and recreational for SC students and service men will be held this Friday in front of Owens hall and the Physical Education building.
Squires and Amazons are joining forces to serve as hosts and hostesses for this week’s all-tJ dig. •
“The dance will start at 7 p.m., i instead of the usual 7:30 and will last until 9:30,” Sally Unmack, chairman of the committee in charge, announced.
“No cars will be allowed to be parked in front of Owens hall west to Hoover- street from 4 p.m. on Friday,” Miss Unmack added.
Records played from the gymnasium for the dancers are to be amplified to the street by a loud speaker. » -
Recreational facilities are available for those interested in the gymnasium.
Chairmen of the committees in charge are Pat Clarke, refreshments; Stuart Skeele, recreational activities; Beverly Griffith, posters. Mrs. Eugenia Minas, instructor in physical education, is the faculty adviser in charge.
“Cokes will be sold in the patio of the Physical Education building for 10 cents, the profits of which go to the War Planning Board,” Miss Unmack said.
“There is still a great demand for women to attend,” Leta Galentine, vice president of the ASSC, emphasized.-
Air passenger course begins
15 minutes may save a life
Talk to tell of war Radar
J. Ralph Meigs, research associate in engineering, will be guest speaker at today’s Men’s Faculty club luncheon in the Student Union grill. Meigs will speak'cm the use of radio and radar in the present war.
Upon receiving his A.B. and E.E. degrees from Stanford university Meigs did research at Stanford in the field of electronics and was later a member of the research staff of Vega Aircraft company.
For the pasi year he has been a research associate at SC, engaged in a project for the Natonal Advisory Council of Aeronautics under the supervision of Sydney F. Duncan, associate professor of mechanical engineering.
Meigs teaches day and evening courses in ultra-high-frequency radio at the university.
- 15 minutes may save a life -
Premed students take test Saturday
The premedical aptitude test will be given Saturday in 306 Science building, at 10 a.m.
A receipt for payment at the comptroller’s office admits each applicant to the test.
Marking the initial appearance of a course of its kind in any western university curriculum, University College will offer a class in airline passenger relations and services featuring lectures by United and Pan-American airlines experts.
The course, conducted by F. P. Barrett, assistant director of school and college service of United airlines, will be offered during the coming term for three units of credit. It will meet every Friday from 6:30 to 10 p.m. in 207 Administration.
Each meeting of the class will hear a lecture by a visiting expert in fields ranging from international air transportation to airline stewardess service.
Capt. Ross Kinkel, chief pilot of I United airlines, will talk on the pilot’s role in air transportation; Conover King, United’s senior instructor, will lecture on the outline of training for airline work.
One of the few qualified authorities on international air transportation, George Strehlke, divisional traffic manager of Pan-American airways, will speak to the class at the first meeting Friday.
Later the class Is to take a trip to the United airlines offices at Sixth and Olive streets to observe on-the-job airline training methods.
Other phases of the wogk to be examined are airlines communications, aviation publicity, air cargo, passenger traffic, and airline employment requirements. One or more experts in these separate fields will discuss their particular problems at each lecture.
Interested students may attend a meeting of the course without charge by obtaining a guest card at the- University College office, 253 Administration.
- 15 minutes may save a life -
WACS to describe military functions
Wac officer Lt. Lee Morse and Corporal Eleanor Kline will speak tomorrow noon at the YWCA house for Y members. Their speeches will be illustrated by a special motion picture, “Life, in a Wac Training Center.”
Tracing the entrance of a civilian woman into the Wac corps, Lieutenant Morse and Corporal Kline will answer questions from the floor.
Townsend calls meeting of new senior council
Members of the senior class council were announced yesterday by Bud Townsend, senior president.
Trojans named to this board will meet Friday at 1 p.m. in the senate chambers. Student Union. Additional council members are to be chosen at the beginning of next term, Townsend stated.
The following are the new members named yesterday: Bill Bad-hava, Tom Baker, Don Brown, Russ Burkett, Jane Burns, Day Carmen, Carroll Brinkerhoff, Bob Cashy, Lynne Cohne, Jeanne Collar, Lloyd Davis, George Douglas, Francis Ensign, Bonnie Farrar.
Betty Fitzpatrick, Leta Galentine, Helen Ann Grundy, Pat Grover, Verniee Hayden, Beth Hartman, Herb Haimsohn, Durwood Howes, Mike Heeger, Bill Jones, Claire Laub, Patty Lynch, Edith McLaughlin, Jack Manley, Bill Murphy, Ed Newton, Lynn Norby, Pattie Owens, Howard Palmer, Melvin Rebstock, John Robinson, Dorothy Smith, Bob Stevens, Herb Turman, Neal Tumetine, Calvin Straub, Emmet Wimple, and Jack Williams.
According to Townsend, more members will be selected when the new semester begins.
-- 15 minutes may save a life —
Squires
. . . will meet tomorrow, 12:45 p.m., 206 Administration, Rea Rawlins, Squire president, *asks the prompt attendance of all members as an important meeting is scheduled. - 15 minutes may save a llf« -
Y songfest
. . . will feature Betty Woldstad, accordionist, now a student at SC, today at noon at the Y house.
Nautical items asked for room
Because of the war, sailing enthusiasts can no longer use their nautical equipment. Because of the war many men are in uniform and are in need of an extra special plaoe to lounge—a canteen.
By using a special addition-sub-traction machine, this adds up to a very good reason why you should contribute to another SC cause— give your old binnacle lights, ships lanterns, life preservers, port holes, nets, or any other type of nautical equipment to the servicemen’s canteen-fumishings fund.
By next Monday (you can get your riggings at home over the weekend) all nautical contributions should be turned in to Henderson hall, where a man will be on duty 24 hours to accept the canteen furnishings.

Dracula's donation
SC HOSTS WAR CONFERENCE
.CULA'S BLOOD will someday save a life. Here hor-actor Bela Lugosi makes his donation to the Red Cross odbank, which will visit SC Sept. 30.
roy sponsors lasma drive
he 15 minutes Trojan trainees and civilians are being d to give September 30 may save the life of an American ceman at war, as on that day a Red Cross mobile plasma-unit will visit SC. *
his plasma-obtaining caravan is scheduled to accomodate
volunteer trainees and civilians from I 12 to 4 p.m. at Elisabeth von Klein-
_ - _ m a rtlllr A Smid hall. Registration for the drive |i|5 I V DU 156 begins Monday, September 20, and
will continue until the donation
lerno stab
IED HEADQUARTERS, North a, Sept. 14—(U.P)—Battered but c Allied troops fought a bat-
o the death with three Nazi red divisions around Salerno and at some points fell back the British raced to their aid th coasts of southern Italy, ing Cosenza and Bari, e Berlin radio, after asserting American troops in panic were g to evacuate _ the Salerno ehead, said in a subsequent cast that it “remains to be whether an evacuation would tempted. Earlier Berlin claim-at 8000 to 10,000 American had been killed, leaving the h in a position comparable to erque.
ran British officers compared ilar effort to storm hill posi-close to shore to British troops fi$$t world war when they to force the Turkish Dardan-and were hurled back disas-ly into the sea.
nt dispatches told of a bloody, aw struggle surging across the es southeast of Salerno, up slopes to the east and on the es road north of the port, e was doubt which side held no itself after it had changed 'g several times, st official reports said that re-rcements and supplies were still aming into the Salerno bridge-d and a front dispatch said that stantial help had arrived to tly bolster Allied infantry and illery strength. It was not clear, ever, when this dispatch was It is said the Allies had dged a gap separating two land-units since the day of the inion, greatly relieving the supply in.
ctivity book ale to close
The njimber of Trojans who
11 occupy the 50-yard line root-section at the UCLA game in the coliseum Sept. 25 is to date a mystery.
Yesterday no one connected with the selling of ASSC activity books was able to give the Trojan the number of books sold.
Sales, however, will not close antil this Friday, and the price for the book, which will admit SC students to six home football fames, dances, drama productions, and other athletic events, is $5.50.
Trainee anti civilian students, who hold activity books, will join form the student rooting section. Trainees who do not own
* student body book will be admitted to a section near the goal line.
quota is reached.
“Trainees are being given preference as to appointment hours,” said Betty May Rinehart, chairman of the SC blood bank committee, “but civilians on campus are welcome to sign up.”
Servicemen are to register in their respective halls. Civilians will make appointments at the Victory hut.
“The Red Cross can handle 85 donors an hour,” stated Jerry Fox, location chairman, “and the 15 minutes it will take the trainee repays itself many times in the lives saved in actual combat.”
Trainees offering plasma require no parental consent, regardless of age. Civilians under 21 must present written consent of at least one parent or guardian.
Sub-chairmen under Miss Rinehart are Bill Ryan, servicemen; Tyler MacDonald, publicity; Don-yell McEathron, posters; Sally Unmack, registration; Jerry Fox, plasma bank location.
Hall representatives include Mickey Heeger, Ned Riley, Calvin Straub,- Bob Mueller, Johnny Kimball, Howard Callanan, Ed Diener, Fred Benson, and Harry Schmidt.
- 15 minutes may save a life -
Panhel tea shows style
Clothes suitable for the well dressed rushee during rush month and rush week will be modeled by 17 sorority members at a fashion show sponsored by the Panhellenic council under the direction of Jean Working, president, from 2 to
4 p.m. tomorrow in the Student Union lounge.
A second presentation of the show will be given at 4:30 p.m. for women in the university dormitories on the lawn in front of the SAE house.
Clothes chosen by Virginia Bates, women’s advertising manager of Desmonds, to > be modeled include date dresses for teas and desserts, suits and wool dresses for brunch and informal teas, black dresses for mother-daughter teas and pledging, skirts and sweaters for campus wear, and slack suits for informal rush parties.
Women who will mod£l are Dorothy Smith, Pat Annabil, Rosemary Trucano, Priscilla Brooks, Marilyn Quaintance, Leah Tiegs, Jerry Rus-cano, Mary Lou Lacey, Helen Be-ronio, Corinne O’Brien, Virginia Miller, Marilou Horn, Peggy Levesque, Nancy Frye, Betty Lou Granger,. Jean Working, and Joy Miller.
- 15 minutes may save a life -
Representatives of nine California universities and colleges will assemble at SC Saturday morning for the first combined War Board conference. Gathering to discuss plans for campus war activities, student body presidents, War Board chairmen, and members will meet in 350 Administration at 9 a.m. to be welcomed by President Rufus B. Von KleinSmid and ASSC President Bill Caldwell.
Following plans for coordinating war activities with college affairs, Patty Wiese, SC War Board chairman, called the
War Board members will meet in the War Board office, 230 Student Union, today at 12:30 p.m. The following are asked to be present: Eleanor Rankin, Carroll Brinkerhoff, Helen Taylor, Charles Aylesbury, Bob Meyer, and Mickey Heeger.
i meeting to allow joint discussion of campus promotions.
Present for the conference will be representatives from SC, Stanford, UCLA, Occidental, Redlands, Pomona, Whittier, Santa Barbara state, and San Diego state colleges.
Knights
Miss Wiese announced that the conference will give War Boards an opportunity to mull over individual ideas which may be adapted to each school. The conference will discuss war stamp and bond promotion, Red Cross programs, postwar planning, home defense, and miscellaneous topics pertaining to servicemen’s programs, salvage, and morale.
“Since SC is one of the leading schools of California with many varied war activities, we are taking the lead in planning coopeiation among the various War Boards, Miss Wiese stated
The SC War Board was first organized in October 1942 and was directed by Jack Williams. With the advent of the college training program, the scope of the War Board was widened and it became a central committee for unification of all student war activities.
Members of the board at present are Patty Wiese, chairman; Helen Taylor, Red Cross activities; Charles Aylesbury, home defense; Carroll Brinkerhoff, stamps and bonds; Mickey Heeger, servicemen’s committee, and Bob Meyer, postwar planning. A representative for the War chest campaign haa yet to be chosen.
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
TROJAN
Vol. XXXV
Night phone: RI. 5472
Los Angeles, Wednesday, Sept. 15, 1943
No. 32
Lecture warns against evil living pattern
Christian methods of dealing with the problems and dilemmas of modern society were analyzed by Dr. George B. Mangold, professor of sociology, yesterday in his discussion of “The Hope of a New World,” by Temple, and “Religion and the Present Crisis,” by Knox.
William Temple, Archbishop of Canterbury, sees two main-faults in English patterns of living that must be eliminated for society’s good. The first is the idea that faith in God is a dispensable indulgence, that religion is not a full-time need. The second flaw is found in the English educational system,' which is neither sectarian nor atheistic, thus fostering the idea that God is a useless ornament, an experience that can be dispensed with.
Temple advocated a six-point program to establish Christian social justice.
1. There must be a limited state ownership, especially o*f public utilities.
2. Labor must have a share in management of industry.
3. Profits must be limited.
4. Government must give a family allowance for the third child and thereafter, to offset the declining British birth rate.
The second book discussed by Dr. Mangold, “Religion and the Present Crisis,” is a compilation of nine lectures by professors at the University of Chicago and edited by John Knox.
“As the book is a compilation of various individual lectures, it lacks the continuity that a work by one author might have,” Dr. Mangold commented.
He added that the authors were experts in their fields, compensating for this fault.
The book emphasizes the fact that democracy is a collective way of life, with emphasis on the community, not the individual. The authors add that Americans expect democracy without the self-sacrifice necessary for a realistic approach to our problem.
- 15 minutes may save a life -
. . . will meet at 12:45 p.m. today at the Kappa Alpha house for a group picture.
Coed aid asked to mail seals
A call has been issued from the SC employment bureau for girls to work in the Los Angeles Tuberculosis seal sale office during the annual fund-raising drive.
According to Mrs. Iva Custer, director of the bureau, girls will be paid 62 cents an hour for typing and office work. They may choose their own hours and may work full days or part-time.
Mrs. Custer asks girls interested in working to report to the employment bureau, Student Union.
Street dance tops All-U party Friday
A combination street dance and recreational for SC students and service men will be held this Friday in front of Owens hall and the Physical Education building.
Squires and Amazons are joining forces to serve as hosts and hostesses for this week’s all-tJ dig. •
“The dance will start at 7 p.m., i instead of the usual 7:30 and will last until 9:30,” Sally Unmack, chairman of the committee in charge, announced.
“No cars will be allowed to be parked in front of Owens hall west to Hoover- street from 4 p.m. on Friday,” Miss Unmack added.
Records played from the gymnasium for the dancers are to be amplified to the street by a loud speaker. » -
Recreational facilities are available for those interested in the gymnasium.
Chairmen of the committees in charge are Pat Clarke, refreshments; Stuart Skeele, recreational activities; Beverly Griffith, posters. Mrs. Eugenia Minas, instructor in physical education, is the faculty adviser in charge.
“Cokes will be sold in the patio of the Physical Education building for 10 cents, the profits of which go to the War Planning Board,” Miss Unmack said.
“There is still a great demand for women to attend,” Leta Galentine, vice president of the ASSC, emphasized.-
Air passenger course begins
15 minutes may save a life
Talk to tell of war Radar
J. Ralph Meigs, research associate in engineering, will be guest speaker at today’s Men’s Faculty club luncheon in the Student Union grill. Meigs will speak'cm the use of radio and radar in the present war.
Upon receiving his A.B. and E.E. degrees from Stanford university Meigs did research at Stanford in the field of electronics and was later a member of the research staff of Vega Aircraft company.
For the pasi year he has been a research associate at SC, engaged in a project for the Natonal Advisory Council of Aeronautics under the supervision of Sydney F. Duncan, associate professor of mechanical engineering.
Meigs teaches day and evening courses in ultra-high-frequency radio at the university.
- 15 minutes may save a life -
Premed students take test Saturday
The premedical aptitude test will be given Saturday in 306 Science building, at 10 a.m.
A receipt for payment at the comptroller’s office admits each applicant to the test.
Marking the initial appearance of a course of its kind in any western university curriculum, University College will offer a class in airline passenger relations and services featuring lectures by United and Pan-American airlines experts.
The course, conducted by F. P. Barrett, assistant director of school and college service of United airlines, will be offered during the coming term for three units of credit. It will meet every Friday from 6:30 to 10 p.m. in 207 Administration.
Each meeting of the class will hear a lecture by a visiting expert in fields ranging from international air transportation to airline stewardess service.
Capt. Ross Kinkel, chief pilot of I United airlines, will talk on the pilot’s role in air transportation; Conover King, United’s senior instructor, will lecture on the outline of training for airline work.
One of the few qualified authorities on international air transportation, George Strehlke, divisional traffic manager of Pan-American airways, will speak to the class at the first meeting Friday.
Later the class Is to take a trip to the United airlines offices at Sixth and Olive streets to observe on-the-job airline training methods.
Other phases of the wogk to be examined are airlines communications, aviation publicity, air cargo, passenger traffic, and airline employment requirements. One or more experts in these separate fields will discuss their particular problems at each lecture.
Interested students may attend a meeting of the course without charge by obtaining a guest card at the- University College office, 253 Administration.
- 15 minutes may save a life -
WACS to describe military functions
Wac officer Lt. Lee Morse and Corporal Eleanor Kline will speak tomorrow noon at the YWCA house for Y members. Their speeches will be illustrated by a special motion picture, “Life, in a Wac Training Center.”
Tracing the entrance of a civilian woman into the Wac corps, Lieutenant Morse and Corporal Kline will answer questions from the floor.
Townsend calls meeting of new senior council
Members of the senior class council were announced yesterday by Bud Townsend, senior president.
Trojans named to this board will meet Friday at 1 p.m. in the senate chambers. Student Union. Additional council members are to be chosen at the beginning of next term, Townsend stated.
The following are the new members named yesterday: Bill Bad-hava, Tom Baker, Don Brown, Russ Burkett, Jane Burns, Day Carmen, Carroll Brinkerhoff, Bob Cashy, Lynne Cohne, Jeanne Collar, Lloyd Davis, George Douglas, Francis Ensign, Bonnie Farrar.
Betty Fitzpatrick, Leta Galentine, Helen Ann Grundy, Pat Grover, Verniee Hayden, Beth Hartman, Herb Haimsohn, Durwood Howes, Mike Heeger, Bill Jones, Claire Laub, Patty Lynch, Edith McLaughlin, Jack Manley, Bill Murphy, Ed Newton, Lynn Norby, Pattie Owens, Howard Palmer, Melvin Rebstock, John Robinson, Dorothy Smith, Bob Stevens, Herb Turman, Neal Tumetine, Calvin Straub, Emmet Wimple, and Jack Williams.
According to Townsend, more members will be selected when the new semester begins.
-- 15 minutes may save a life —
Squires
. . . will meet tomorrow, 12:45 p.m., 206 Administration, Rea Rawlins, Squire president, *asks the prompt attendance of all members as an important meeting is scheduled. - 15 minutes may save a llf« -
Y songfest
. . . will feature Betty Woldstad, accordionist, now a student at SC, today at noon at the Y house.
Nautical items asked for room
Because of the war, sailing enthusiasts can no longer use their nautical equipment. Because of the war many men are in uniform and are in need of an extra special plaoe to lounge—a canteen.
By using a special addition-sub-traction machine, this adds up to a very good reason why you should contribute to another SC cause— give your old binnacle lights, ships lanterns, life preservers, port holes, nets, or any other type of nautical equipment to the servicemen’s canteen-fumishings fund.
By next Monday (you can get your riggings at home over the weekend) all nautical contributions should be turned in to Henderson hall, where a man will be on duty 24 hours to accept the canteen furnishings.